Colonial Acres Coins
SKU: SKU:July.Week1.P3-KB1338
Bundle of 99 Sequential Croatia 1991-1994 100,000 Dinara Banknotes, 99pcs
Bundle of 99 Sequential Croatia 1991-1994 100,000 Dinara Banknotes, 99pcs
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Bundle of 99 Sequential Croatia 1991-1994 100,000 Dinara Banknotes, 99pcs
The Republic of Croatia borders Slovenia, Hungary, and Serbia on the coast of the Adriatic Sea. The original Croats arrived in the late 6th century, when the area was still largely referred to by the Classical name of Illyria. It became an independent kingdom in 925 with the coronation of Tomislav, but the continuous threat of the Ottoman Empire and rivalry with the Republic of Venice saw it join with the Habsburg monarchy in 1527. It remained tightly bound to Austria and Hungary until after World War I, when it became part of Yugoslavia, before finally declaring its independence in 1991. A fierce War of Independence began, and the new state of Croatia was officially recognized in 1992.
These 100,000 dinara banknotes, produced between 1991 and 1994, feature physicist and mathematician Roger Joseph Boscovich on the obverse. The reverse displays the 1932 scuplture by Ivan Mestrovic, "Mother Croatia."
The Republic of Croatia borders Slovenia, Hungary, and Serbia on the coast of the Adriatic Sea. The original Croats arrived in the late 6th century, when the area was still largely referred to by the Classical name of Illyria. It became an independent kingdom in 925 with the coronation of Tomislav, but the continuous threat of the Ottoman Empire and rivalry with the Republic of Venice saw it join with the Habsburg monarchy in 1527. It remained tightly bound to Austria and Hungary until after World War I, when it became part of Yugoslavia, before finally declaring its independence in 1991. A fierce War of Independence began, and the new state of Croatia was officially recognized in 1992.
These 100,000 dinara banknotes, produced between 1991 and 1994, feature physicist and mathematician Roger Joseph Boscovich on the obverse. The reverse displays the 1932 scuplture by Ivan Mestrovic, "Mother Croatia."
